The Irapuato to Toronto corridor runs northbound from Mexico to Canada and typically crosses at Laredo (World Trade Bridge). On Cargado, 15+ carriers have bid here in the past year.
Northbound (Mexico to Canada)
Dry van 61% · Reefer 17% · Open deck 11%
15+ carriers have bid here in the past year
15+ loads posted, 40+ carrier bids (past 12 months)
This corridor connects the Irapuato market (Irapuato, Silao, Celaya, Guanajuato, Apaseo El Grande, Salamanca) with the Toronto market (Toronto, Mississauga, Brampton, Vaughan, Cambridge, Hamilton), running northbound from Mexico to Canada. Over the past 12 months brokers posted this corridor to the Cargado marketplace regularly, and 15+ carriers have bid here in the past year.
Freight out of the Irapuato market leans toward automotive parts, food & beverage and pharma & veterinary based on what brokers actually post there. You can read more about moving these goods on the freight types pages.
Postings over the past year break down as dry van 61%, reefer 17%, open deck 11%. Browse equipment definitions in the glossary if a term is unfamiliar.
Mexico–Canada freight clears two international borders: the Mexican leg typically at Laredo (World Trade Bridge) and the Canadian leg at Windsor – Detroit (Ambassador Bridge) or Sarnia – Port Huron, often moving in-bond through the U.S. between them. Line up customs coordination for both legs before dispatch.
Brokers post corridors like this to Cargado's marketplace, where 2,000+ verified carriers bid and every counterparty has been vetted before the first load moves.
On Cargado, brokers post the corridor and vetted carriers bid on it. 15+ carriers have bid here in the past year. Every carrier is verified before it can bid, which replaces cold-calling unknown carriers.
Over the past year postings here were Dry van 61%, Reefer 17%, Open deck 11%. If you need a type you do not see, post the load anyway. Carriers with matching equipment get notified automatically.
Carriers handle the transport side and customs brokers clear the freight. Have your customs broker's entry filed before the truck reaches the border, and look for carriers with the right border credentials.
Post it to 2,000+ vetted Mexico and Canada carriers, or check live market rates before you quote.